Author Archives: vpacheco32@hotmail.com

Warren and Pelosi Fight Spending Bill

Elizabeth Warren, Maxine Waters

The US House of Representatives passed a $1.1 trillion, 1603-page spending bill late last night, 219-209. Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) led the fight against passage, asking if Congress was representing Wall Street or representing the people. She said the bill represented “the worst of government for the rich and the powerful”. The bill contains a provision that weakens the Dodd-Frank Financial Reform Act by easing restrictions on banks, which ultimately contributed to the financial debacle of 2008.

House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) took to the floor to denounce the bill saying members were being blackmailed to pass the measure in the closing hours of the session with the threat of a government shut-down. The bill was passed within 3 hours of the deadline.

The bill contains many provisions impacting millions of people. It includes the Hyde Amendment, which bans spending federal dollars on abortion, and it includes provisions spending $5 million and upwards to $12-15 million more for ineffectual and harmful abstinence-only education. But it also contains level funding for the Teen Pregnancy Initiative which covers comprehensive family planning education at $101 million.

One of the most controversial aspects of the legislation is that it includes language that could result in cuts to pensions for millions of retired workers under the age of 75 years and even minimal cuts to those over 75.. It allows cuts to multi-employer underfunded pensions plans usually sponsored by employers and unions. It allows the plans to cut benefits well before they reach insolvency. The teamsters claim that one of the proposed revisions could save UPS $2 billion. Some pensioners could lose as much as a half to two-thirds of their pension.

This pension cutting provision is supported by both Democrats and Republicans and some unions and employers. AARP and the Pension Rights Center among other advocacy groups opposed it. Karen Friedman, the pension rights center policy director, warned “this sets a precedent for cutting social security and senior employer plans.”

A provision having nothing to do with government spending was included allowing wealthy individuals to increase their contributions to national political party committees from a maximum of $97,200 in 2014 to possibly as much as $777,600. Calculations differ, but the increase is substantial, giving more power, as if they needed it, to wealthy donors. The citizens united Supreme Court decision, allows individuals to give to non-profit independent expenditure campaigns unlimited secret funds. One can argue this provision provides more power to political parties in fighting groups like the Koch brother’s Americans for Prosperity.

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If These Walls Could Talk: Fighting harassment with street art

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By ANITA LITTLE

“I hope when women see them, they’ll feel less alone in the streets.”

This is what Brooklyn-based artist Tatyana Fazlalizadeh wants her public art series, “Stop Telling Women to Smile,” to do for women in eastern U.S. cities—and then across the country and globe—who daily combat street harassment. Starting in her Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood, Fazlalizadeh has peppered walls with black-and-white drawings of brazenfaced women accompanied by bold slogans such as, “Women are not outside for your entertainment.”

When a man tells a woman to smile, says the artist, he’s expecting her to entertain him. “It’s the same as saying, ‘Dance for me; jump for me.’ Smile is never really a question; it’s a command. Street harassment isn’t always the construction worker shouting from across the street…street harassment is about a man forcing himself into a woman’s space.”

Usually an oil painter, Fazlalizadeh first thought to express her frustration at street sexism with paintings, but decided it would be more impactful to place the artwork in the environment where harassment occurs. So she began interviewing friends and colleagues about their experiences in public spaces, and then drawing portraits of them.

“I decided on posters because they’re quick, they’re outside, and they’re not too polished,” she says. “It places the images of women outside in the public space boldly and strongly. It’s about taking agency by using our voices and our images.”

Fazlalizadeh takes the anti-street harassment movement a step further by throwing race into the conversation. She argues that race informs how certain women are disrespected in public spaces, and she wants to reset the dialogue to one that factors in the intersection of race with gender.

“Street harassment happens because of male entitlement, so it’s only natural that all the other types of power and privilege would come into that equation,” she says. “With women of color, our bodies are already hypersexualized, and that is reflected in how men will approach you. Some of the conversations about street harassment seem to glaze over race, but I want to explore it more.”

Fazlalizadeh, who herself is African American and Iranian, focuses on women of color in her posters. “I wanted to portray women of color first and foremost,” she says. “I wanted to inject the voices of women of color standing up for themselves.”

The work seems to have hit a nerve. After garnering attention with her posters in New York and Philadelphia, Fazlalizadeh launched a Kickstarter campaign that would enable her to not only ship posters to those who wish to paste them up in their own communities but to travel herself to about 10 more cities domestically and internationally, interview women there and create more pieces. The Kickstarter successfully raised more than double its goal, nearly $35,000.

“It was amazing how quickly it happened,” she says. “I haven’t really celebrated yet; it’s more about getting organized to make the work as great as I possibly can.”

Finally, something to smile about.

Photos courtesy of Tatyana Fazlalizadeh.

Reprinted from the Fall 2013 issue of Ms. To have this issue delivered straight to your door, Apple, or Android device, join the Ms. Community.

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The Cherokee Word for Water

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FEATURE | WINTER/SPRING 2014

A new film reminds us of Wilma Mankiller’s leadership and commitment to community


By MELISSA MCGLENSEY

WILMA MANKILLER, THE first woman chief of the modern Cherokee Nation, died four years ago, but thanks to a determined effort by her family and friends, her legacy lives on in film. The Cherokee Word for Water is a featurelength narrative based on a major project Mankiller took on for the Cherokee Nation.

The film, directed by Mankiller’s husband and longtime communitydevelopment partner, Charlie Soap, follows a young Mankiller as she works to bring water to the rural Cherokee town of Bell, Okla. Mankiller and Soap had to convince the small community, which had limited public funds, to lay 18 miles of waterline by themselves in order to bring running water to their homes. Thanks in large part to Mankiller’s fierce determination, the community was able to complete the project and improve their quality of life.

“The Bell project created a movement within the Cherokee nation for self help,” Soap told Ms. The success of the Bell Waterline Project also vaulted a young Wilma Mankiller into tribal politics, and she ended up serving the tribe as principal chief for 10 years. During that time she made great strides to improve health, education, housing, utilities management and tribal government. She also devoted much of her time to civil rights work, focusing largely on women’s rights.

Soap and the film’s coproducer, Kristina Kiehl, have chosen to forgo the traditional film distribution route and instead opted for a communitydriven model in which people organize their own screenings of the film. Screenings on reservations have evolved into forums for discussion about issues in Indian country, boosting community organizing and activism. In that way, Mankiller’s work continues on through the film.

“Local groups can use a screening as a fundraiser and double the impact,” says Kiehl, a feminist activist and longtime friend of Mankiller’s. The two became close while on the Ms. Foundation for Women board of directors with mutual friend, and Ms. cofounder, Gloria Steinem.

More than three decades after work began on the Bell Waterline Project, native communities across the U.S. are still in need. A disproportionately large percentage of American Indians live below the federal poverty line, and issues such as sexual assault on reservations and inadequate housing still abound. One in three Native women will experience sexual assault in her lifetime, and at least 90,000 Indian families are homeless or under-housed. Despite such obvious needs, the recent federal sequester cut $500 million in federal funding for tribes. As Kim Teehee, a long-standing advocate for Native American issues, told Ms., these cuts have devastated areas of Indian country already suffering from high unemployment.

Much like the Waterline Project, the film was a community effort; shooting was done on tribal lands using Native actors primarily. The Cherokee Word for Water will hopefully inspire similar collective efforts in other communities, and demonstrate the necessity of strong women in positions of power in our society.

“I think that the biggest legacy that Wilma has left us with is leadership,” said Charlie Soap. “She inspired people.”

For more information about the film or to host a screening, please visit www.cw4w.com.

Reprinted from the Winter/Spring issue of Ms. To have this issue delivered straight to your door, Apple, or Android device, join the Ms. Community.

Comments on this piece? We want to hear them! Send to letterstotheeditor@msmagazine.com. To have your letter considered for publication, please include your city and state.

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The 88 Percent

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The Supreme Court’s Hobby Lobby decision threatens all contraception


By SARAH R. BOONIN

WHEN THE U.S. SUPREME COURT RULED 5-4 THIS PAST SUMMER IN THE CASE OF BURWELL v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc., the court’s majority tried to cast it as a decision about “religious freedom.” That’s because it allowed closely held corporations with religious objections to certain types of birth control to escape the mandate of the Affordable Care Act to provide contraceptive coverage to its employees.

Commentators widely condemned the “breathtakingly broad” scope of the 5-4 opinion in Hobby Lobby, and many bemoaned the court’s further personification of corporations as having religious faith. But a closer look at Hobby Lobby reveals a far broader and deeper threat to women’s reproductive health than most realize. Perhaps that is because the court’s majority virtually erased women from the pages of its opinion, even though it was about our lives.

Any study of U.S. reproductive-health law should begin with the case of Griswold v. Connecticut. Written almost 50 years ago, Griswold held that the constitutional right to privacy includes the right of married couples to make personal decisions about using contraceptives. It ushered in a new era of women’s control over their bodies and transformed women’s ability to participate more equally in nondomestic spheres.

Since Griswold, the right to contraception has served as the foundation for the court’s treatment of women’s reproductive health. It laid the legal groundwork for a broad range of sexual and reproductive freedoms, including the right to abortion, the decriminalization of same-sex intimacy and, most recently, the right to same-sex marriage. Yet a majority of the court in Hobby Lobby displayed an utter disregard for Griswold and women’s access to contraception.

The Hobby Lobby majority barely discussed the right to contraception. Tasked with balancing the right of a corporation’s free exercise of religion under the 1993 Religious Freedom Restoration Act against the government’s interests in providing contraceptive coverage, the majority did little balancing at all. Instead, the majority explained in great detail the role of religion in the corporations that filed suit.

Tellingly, the majority referenced the right to privacy just once—and that concerned the privacy rights of corporations. The majority so cleverly framed the issue as exclusively about religious freedom that it was easy to miss any other part of the equation. Hobby Lobby might as well have been a decision about a corporation’s religious objections to toenail clipping.

Perhaps the most glaring example of the opinion’s indifference to women’s reproductive interests came as the majority considered whether the government had a “compelling interest” in mandating contraceptive coverage. Almost as an aside, the majority declared the government’s justifications for the mandate—including public health and gender equality—to be too “broad” and “unfocused.” But how are public health and gender equality any broader than the “sincerely held religious beliefs” that carried the day? Without deciding the issue of compelling interest, the majority grudgingly assumed the government’s interests were sufficient— but then they ruled in favor of Hobby Lobby on other grounds.

To be clear: A majority of the U.S. Supreme Court refused to make a definitive decision on whether or not the government has compelling reasons for ensuring women’s access to contraception. Even Justice Anthony Kennedy was disturbed by this and wrote separately to clarify, among other things, that the contraceptive mandate furthers “a legitimate and compelling interest in the health of female employees.”

The majority went to great lengths to inform readers that the opinion should be read narrowly as applying to the “very specific” facts of the case. The court assured readers that they need not worry about collateral damage to public-health laws, other medical procedures and drugs, and antidiscrimination laws. The court essentially gave a free pass for religious discrimination only when it comes to women and their reproductive health.

That the court thought it palatable to relegate women’s contraceptive access to a special-interest category rather than a basic health-care necessity is offensive. That it offered its twisted reading of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act as more plausible than the alternative—that religious freedom ends where women’s constitutional rights begin—is astonishing.

The court claimed that the decision applies to only four types of contraception viewed—inaccurately—as tantamount to abortion. Yet nothing in the opinion appears to prevent a corporation from objecting to all forms of contraception. Equally disingenuous was the court’s promise that religious exemptions extend only to “closely held” corporations like Hobby Lobby, since roughly 90 percent of U.S. corporations are closely held.

Indeed, less than a week after the Hobby Lobby decision, the court expanded its attack on the contraceptive mandate in the case of Wheaton College v. Burwell, temporarily blocking the government from enforcing the mandate against a religious college (not a closely held corporation). The emergency order seems to extend to all forms of contraception, not just the four most “objectionable.”

Wheaton already qualified for an accommodation under the contraceptive mandate; the college merely needed to notify the third-party administrator of its health plan about its religious objection, and the administrator would be required to directly arrange coverage. But even that was too great an imposition on religion for the court. As a result, many women insured through religiously affiliated nonprofits (hospitals, colleges, charities and more) likely will miss out on contraceptive coverage unless the Obama administration acts.

The majority opinion in Hobby Lobby is startlingly broad, as Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg wrote in her scathing dissent. It has the potential to neuter important federal and state laws, and propels corporations further into the realm of personhood. And the mandate will probably land again in the court’s lap, with the majority already having demonstrated its willingness to color outside the lines it drew in Hobby Lobby.

We already knew that a majority of the court is decidedly anti-abortion, but in Hobby Lobby and Wheaton we have had a terrifying glimpse into the majority’s hostility toward an even more foundational aspect of women’s reproductive health—the right to contraception. More than 88 percent of women ages 15 to 44 who have had sexual intercourse have used a highly effective, reversible method of birth control—the pill, patch, IUD or injectables. Hobby Lobby should be of grave concern to that 88 percent.

Congress has the power to fix the law that the court’s majority in Hobby Lobby distorted, and we should insist that it does so.

Reprinted from the Fall issue of Ms. To have this issue delivered straight to your door, Apple, or Android device, join the Ms. Community.

Comments on this piece? We want to hear them! Send to letterstotheeditor@msmagazine.com. To have your letter considered for publication, please include your city and state.

Image via Shutterstock.

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Measure by Measure

voting

The upcoming election gives state voters a voice on women’s rights


By GAYLYNN BURROUGHS

IN NOVEMBER, VOTERS WILL have the opportunity to decide several critical issues in their states—from banning abortion and birth control to legalizing marijuana to raising the minimum wage to increasing voting rights to restricting labor rights to granting state constitutional rights for women.

State ballot measures are a significant part of the U.S. political process, allowing voters to engage directly in our democracy. Each state has its own rules about how a measure makes it to the ballot but, in general, a measure can be referred to the ballot either by the state legislature or by a group of citizens who collect the required number of signatures.

Through ballot measures, citizens this fall will, for better or worse, create change that will potentially have long-lasting effects. Here are a few critical measures affecting women this fall. Read up, then get out and vote!

PERSONHOOD.
Anti-abortion and anti-birth-control extremists continue to push for state constitutional amendments to outlaw abortion and some forms of birth control by granting rights to fetuses, embryos and fertilized eggs. After passing a series of anti-abortion bills into law in 2013, the North Dakota state legislature, ignoring opposition from the North Dakota Medical Association, placed on the ballot Measure 1 to amend the state constitution to provide an “inalienable right to life” at “any stage of development.” If passed by the voters, supporters say it will ban all abortions cretions in the state, without exception, and could make illegal many forms of birth control, stem-cell research and in vitro fertilization. Measure 1 also threatens end-of-life care and could interfere with organ donation.

Personhood USA’s Colorado chapter is trying a different tactic. Colorado voters have twice soundly defeated broad personhood amendments to the Colorado constitution, in 2008 and 2010, but the new Amendment 67— which would amend the state constitution to define “person” and “child” to include “unborn human beings”— would only affect the state criminal code and Wrongful Death Act.

Though the strategy is arguably different, the result is the same. If passed, Amendment 67 would threaten abortion rights, birth control, fertility treatments and some medical treatments for critically ill pregnant women—and open up the possibility of criminal investigations into miscarriages. All pregnant women’s bodies would become potential crime scenes. Supporters of the amendment claim that the change would protect pregnant women from crime—but we’ve heard that one before. The reality is that these laws are used to punish women, many who are struggling with drug dependency and mental-health issues and too often suffer tragic pregnancy outcomes.

ABORTION.
In Tennessee, women’srights groups and reproductivehealth advocates are fighting against Amendment 1, a ballot measure that would amend the state constitution to declare that there is no right to abortion in Tennessee—even in cases of rape, incest or to save the life of the mother. If passed, the amendment would give the state legislature even more room to create far-reaching restrictions on abortion access, even for women in the most tragic circumstances. The Tennessee constitution provides some of the strongest privacy rights in the nation, but this amendment would take away those rights and open the door further to government interference in women’s personal decision-making.

BIRTH CONTROL.
Just before the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Hobby Lobby v. Burwell (see Page 10) that owners of closely held corporations could refuse to provide insurance coverage for birth control on religious grounds, legislators in Illinois decided to put a related question to the voters: “Shall any health insurance plan in Illinois that provides prescription drug coverage be required to include prescription birth control as part of that coverage?” Although the outcome of the advisory referendum will not be binding and this coverage is already required under Illinois law, an overwhelming “yes” vote this November would signal a strong level of state support for the Affordable Care Act’s contraceptive-coverage benefit.

EQUAL RIGHTS.
This year saw increased activity in support of constitutional protections against sex discrimination. In Oregon, Vote ERA collected more than 118,000 signatures to place Measure 89 on the ballot to determine whether an equal rights amendment should be added to the state constitution. If it passes, Oregon will join 20 other states in having a state constitutional prohibition on sex discrimination. And the Oregon measure adds to the momentum created in state legislatures to ratify the federal ERA. The Virginia Senate, for example, has voted for the third time since 2011 to ratify the ERA (the House failed to bring the measure to a vote), and the Illinois House is expected to vote on ERA ratification this fall. In May, the Illinois Senate also overwhelmingly voted for ratification, and if the ERA passes the state House, Illinois will become the 36th state to ratify the federal ERA.

MINIMUM WAGE.
With federal minimum-wage legislation stalled in Congress, state and local governments such as Hawaii and Seattle have increased minimum wages on their own. Now Alaska and South Dakota will offer measures on their ballots to increase the minimum wage. Women make up the majority of low-wage workers, so would especially benefit from an increase, which would help close the gender pay gap, reduce women’s poverty and provide more economic security for families. Neither Alaska nor South Dakota propose to raise their minimum wage as high as $10.10—as the federal bill would—but both are moving in the right direction.

VOTING RIGHTS.
State voter-suppression laws—which disproportionately hurt women and people of color—have resurged since last year’s Supreme Court decision in Shelby v. Holder invalidated a key provision of the Voting Rights Act. Proponents of voting rights are now going on the offensive and directly to voters. Illinois voters can determine whether the state should amend its constitution to strengthen voting rights, and Connecticut voters will decide whether to amend their state constitution to allow early voting.

Reprinted from the Fall issue of Ms. To have this issue delivered straight to your door, Apple, or Android device, join the Ms. Community.

Comments on this piece? We want to hear them! Send to letterstotheeditor@msmagazine.com. To have your letter considered for publication, please include your city and state.

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March on Washington to End Police Violence This Saturday

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The families of Eric Garner, Michael Brown, Trayvon Martin, Akai Gurley, Tamir Rice, and Reverend Al Sharpton will be marching in Washington, DC tomorrow to call for an end to police violence.

A coalition of civil rights groups led by Reverend Al Sharpton at the National Action Network organized the “Justice for All” march, which will begin at Freedom Plaza at noon on Saturday, December 13, and proceeds down Pennsylvania Avenue to the Capitol. The Justice for All march, announced on Wednesday, is not expected to have record-setting numbers, but to make a strong national statement in support of street demonstrations nation-wide. Charter buses, however, are coming from many cities and states across the east coast.

Those participating in the march are calling on Congress to take legislative action to combat racial profiling, and police discrimination and violence. For more information on the march and how to get involved, visit the National Action Network’s webpage.

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Senate Blocks Military Justice Improvement Act

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The Senate denied a vote for the Military Justice Improvement Act yesterday, blocking the act for the second time this year.

A bipartisan group of senators approached the senate floor yesterday to push for the Military Justice Improvement Act (MJIA), spearheaded by Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY). Gillibrand was hoping the Act would be added as an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act, but said that she will push for it as a stand-alone bill, and is even prepared to urge President Obama to take executive action. The bill is hoping to combat recently released data from a Pentagon report showing little progress over the past year in preventing sexual assault in the military, making it easier for survivors to report assault, and eliminating retaliation for those who do report. The bill fell short of being passed by only five votes earlier this year.

The MJIA would move the decision to prosecute military sexual assault outside the chain of command and give it to trained, independent professional military prosecutors. “The Department of Defense has failed on this issue for over 20 years now,” Senator Gillibrand said yesterday, “and the data shows they still don’t get it.” She continued “Why should our service members enjoy a lesser standard of justice and fairness than you and I, whose freedoms they risk everything to protect?”

The need for reform was emphasized by Col. Don Christensen (Ret.), former Chief Prosecutor of the Air Force, who called the current process an “ineffective, broken system of justice,” that “undermines the military I love.” Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) agreed, saying “What we’re doing now is not working.”

Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC), who led the objection to the bill, said he feared that it would undermine the authority of commanders in the military, although Sen. Gillibrand clarified that this bill would only affect the top 3 percent of commanders.

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Groups Demand Gender-Responsive Climate Policy at UN Convention

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Through December 12, policymakers representing at least 195 countries are in Lima, Peru for the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) COP20 (Conference of the Parties). The talks are a continuation of the UN Climate Summit in New York earlier this year, and a precursor to the 2015 climate meeting in Paris, where these world leaders are expected to finalize a new global climate agreement. Friday, the Climate Action Network (CAN), a civil society member of the UNFCCC’s Women and Gender Constituency (WGC), issued an assessment of the gender gap facing the ongoing global climate discussions.

In the Lima edition of the ECO newsletter, CAN acknowledged the COP20 President’s stated intent to advance “gender-responsive climate policy,” but called on the body to codify those commitments into the actual convention. The Women and Gender Constituency is a coalition of civil society organizations that participates in the COP meetings. The WGC is working to ensure women’s rights and gender justice are central elements of the final UNFCCC agreement.

In a statement released Wednesday, the WGC stated that one of their two primary concerns is the development of a climate plan that includes a measure for gender equality. On the first day of COP20 talks, Carmen Capriles of Reaccion Climatica in Bolivia, addressed the larger delegation on behalf of the WGC. “In regions like ours here in Latin America, where women are distinguished by their triple work days; as heads of household, as mothers and as fundamental players in the economy, it is important to recognize that their livelihoods are being affected [by climate change]…which is compounded by poor access to resources and land, lack of education, and lack of access to decision-making,” Capriles said. “This reality has caused women to be on the frontlines of climate action.”

The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations reports that women produce more than half of all the food grown in the world, and women are responsible for some 60 to 80 percent of food production in most developing countries. According to a 2009 Resource Guide on Gender and Climate Change, the UN Development Programme determined that “poor women’s limited access to resources, restricted rights, limited mobility, and muted voices in shaping decisions make them highly vulnerable to climate change.” Despite their leadership and expert natural resource management and conservation, Indigenous women throughout the world are the first line of defense when extreme weather events and natural disasters happen, yet there is no formalized emergency response mechanism or communication system to reach them. The UNDP also cited how restrictions that aim to limit the mobility of girls and women can endanger those needing access to shelter or medical attention in a disaster emergency, but without gender-conscious climate policy, there is no account for such nuance.

Mrinalini Rai, representing the Global Forest Coalition, another member of the WGC, demanded that the 2015 talks in Paris be transparent, people-centered negotiations. “This includes women, youth, Indigenous peoples, and local communities, with considerable expertise to be found in each of the constituencies represented here in Lima, Rai told the larger body last week. “This is the right moment to set the bar high and ensure that future climate policies take into account the rights, needs, perspectives, capacities and expertise of women and men alike, in order to achieve truly sustainable development and avert the climate crisis.”

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